Meanwhile Ballmer looks to pump shareholders up with a letter emphasizing Microsoft's success

When a more mature Steve Jobs came back to Apple, Inc. (AAPL), he revitalized the company he co-founded as a rebellious youth. Millions of iPods, iPhones, and iPhones later, Apple is the world's most valuable company in terms of market cap. Meanwhile, Apple's perennial rival Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) is struggle not for want of user, but for a faltering brand image. Some say that Bill Gates -- the man who founded Microsoft and drove it to its initial success -- should return.

Steve Jobs did a phenomenal piece of work. Apple, most people would have expected, were on their way going out of business. He had run Apple since it was a tiny company and then he came back in and made incredibly valuable. It’s a phenomenal business story and I thought Walter Isaacson did a good job catching that in the book. Steve and I were friends, competitors – we were a lot of different things. It was amazing what he did.

I’m now committed full time to my foundation work and I give about 15% of my time as Chairman of Microsoft. Microsoft is moving ahead with Windows 8 that combines the best of tablet with PC. This month the very first hardware based on that idea including Microsoft’s own Surface will ship. So there’s a lot of exciting stuff ahead in software and I didn’t retire from Microsoft because I thought things were getting boring. In fact a lot of best ideas- the vision of artificial intelligence and robots are still ahead but i did decide the philanthropic world was where my contribution would be more unique and so thats what I’ll work on full time for the rest of my life.

Some people will be disappointed that Mr. Gates is resisting a comeback.

II. Steve Ballmer: Microsoft is Strong

But Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is convinced no comeback is necessary. He insists that the image that Microsoft lacks creativity is badly out of date. In a letter to shareholders, he brags that 1.3 billion people worldwide use Windows and that there are 8 million active Windows app developers.

For fiscal year 2012, revenue grew to a record $73.7 billion. We also maintained strong cost discipline resulting in cash flow from operations of $31.6 billion, an increase of 17 percent from the prior year. In addition, we returned $10.7 billion to shareholders through stock buybacks and dividends.

In other words financially Microsoft shows little sign of being a "dying" brand as some opinion pieces have claims.

Windows 8 is a huge risk. But Steve Ballmer is convinced it will pay off, even as Bill Gates watches -- permanently -- from the sidelines.

quote: 2. Visual Studio 2012 Express (free edition) is restricted to Metro only apps. They want developers building Metro apps to boost their metro app catalog. Understandable. I think eventually they'll unlock this with VS12 SP1 but at launch developers will be stuck with VS10 (not bad but loses the newest compiler) or a paid version of VS12.

Thats my biggest issue; Metro's a shameless attempt to monetize apps on Windows machines. Next step is to cripple access to API's and whatnot to apps not installed via Metro, and the step after that? Platform lockdown, just like we see in cell phones and tablets, where installing anything third party might require cracking a boot loader, etc.

I'll end up using Win8, but if MS goes another step in that direction, I'll throw my lot in with the commies in linuxland just to spite them. The enemy of my enemy would become my friend.